Genre: Comedy
Director: Marco Schnabel
Cast: Mike Myers, Jessica Alba, Justin Timberlake,
Ben Kingsley, Meagan Good, John Oliver, Verne Troyer, Romany
Malco, Jim Gaffigan
RunTime: 1 hr 28 mins
Released By: UIP
Rating: NC-16 (Sexual Humour)
Official Website: http://www.theloveguru.com/
Opening Day: 7 August 2008
Synopsis:
In the comedy, "The Love Guru" (Myers), Pitka is
an American who was left at the gates of an ashram in India
as a child and raised by gurus. He moves back to the U.S.
to seek fame and fortune in the world of self-help and spirituality.
His unorthodox methods are put to the test when he must settle
a rift between Toronto Maple Leafs star hockey player Darren
Roanoke (Malco) and his estranged wife. After the split, Roanoke's
wife starts dating L.A. Kings star Jacques Grande (Timberlake)
out of revenge, sending her husband into a major professional
skid -- to the horror of the teams' owner Jane Bullard (Alba)
and Coach Cherkov (Troyer). Pitka must return the couple to
marital nirvana and get Roanoke back on his game so the team
can break the 40-year-old "Bullard Curse" and win
the Stanley Cup.
Movie Review:
Mike Myers returns to the big screen after lending his voice
to the big green ogre
Shrek, during which time it would not be impossible to imagine
he would be somewhere
in South Asia researching this guru role for a comeback film.
Did it succeed?
Unfortunately, Myers would discover that being a guru isn't
easy at all, especially
a jokey one with plenty of unoriginal thought, and that hiding
behind a digitally
animated creation would be much easier.
Similar
to its predecessor before it, The Guru in 2002 starring Jimi
Mistry also
took the mickey out of self-help amongst those who need a
little sense of direction
in their miserable love lives. Only that The Guru back then
took some effort in
positioning itself (heh) as a suitable romantic date movie,
while Myers' version
went for broke and placed its bets on being totally irreverent
and comedic, only to
disastrous effect when plenty of its jokes missed their mark.
If
there's a semblance of a plot, the movie can't decide if it
wanted to be sports
themed, love-related themed, or to parody self-help in general,
so it decided to do
them all, so much so that the movie came across as scattered,
and spluttered along
the way as it shifted gears each time it ran out of steam
during a scene. It had its
fair share of ice hockey games given that the subject of professional
interest of
Mike Myers' Guru PItka, is star player Darren Roanoke (Romany
Malco), and Pitka's
mission is to get Darren back with his wife Prudence (Meagan
Good) so that Darren's
mission to help his team in their championship run will be
back on track.
Myers
seemed a little too self conscious in his role here and failed
to disappear
completely into it despite the hairy makeover. As a Deepak
Chopra wannabe, whom the
story would suggest Pitka and Chopra come from the same school
under Guru
Tugginmypudha (Ben Kingsley?!) Guru Pitka is something of
an Austin Powers with his
penchant for song and dance, and his intentional or otherwise
sexual innuendoes
which you have to pay attention to catch them all. The witty
word pun and dialogue
is Myers forte, and the best bits in the movie are those moments
which happen to
unfortunately be few and far between, where you are likely
to do a double take as
they just whizz you by.
Otherwise,
the other supporting characters are really pedestrian in the
movie.
Jessica Alba as Jane Bullard is a completely flower vase role,
and Ben Kingsley
hammed it up too much as the crossed eye guru. Verne "mini-me"
Troyer also shares
the spotlight though his best line came about during the NG
sequence shown when the
end credits rolled. Perhaps Justin Timberlake's role as Jacques
Grande (no prizes as
to grande-what) brought on the most laughs with his funny
French-accent and
effeminate demeanour. which is a striking throwback to Sacha
Baron Cohen's character
Jean Girard in Talladega Nights,
You
can feel The Love Guru running out of gags in the bag when
it shown its hand too early in the movie during Pitka's self-help
sessions, and ran out of material later in the movie where
it had to resort to cutting corners from its D-R-A-M-A five-parter
technique. Despite pulling everything from his repertoire,
Mike Myers' The Love Guru just couldn't make it last all the
way to a satisfying climax, of pure comedy.
Movie Rating:
Review by Stefan Shih
(A refund is in order if you paid this guru in full)
|